The Lilium Chair is a limited-edition seat designed by Nicolas Riano Guerrero of Studio NRG using recycled aluminium sourced from discarded car rims. Developed in Los Angeles, the chair translates an industrial material into a sculptural furniture piece with soft, organic contours. The design draws on the geometry of flower petals, particularly in the curved backrest, which was shaped through studies of petal forms and seated body positions. Recovered aluminium is melted down and recast to create the chair's distinctive silhouette.
The chair is produced through a sand-casting process at the South Gate foundry in Los Angeles. This manufacturing method creates a textured surface finish and introduces subtle variations across each piece. Guerrero selected recycled high-grade aluminium diverted from landfill as the primary material, giving automotive waste a new application within furniture design.
Recycled Aluminum Chairs
Lilium Chair is Cast from Aluminium Recovered from Discarded Car Rims
Trend Themes
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Automotive Waste Furniture — Discarded vehicle components are emerging as premium raw materials for sculptural furnishings, opening space for circular design models that turn industrial scrap into collectible home objects.
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Recast Metal Craft — Sand-cast recycled aluminum offers textured, one-of-a-kind surfaces that position manufacturing variation as an aesthetic advantage in limited-edition product design.
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Biomorphic Industrial Design — Organic forms inspired by petals and body ergonomics are softening perceptions of heavy industrial materials, creating new demand for furniture that blends sustainability with expressive silhouettes.
Industry Implications
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Furniture Design — Luxury and collectible furniture markets are gaining new material narratives through recycled metals, enabling differentiated pieces that combine environmental value with sculptural appeal.
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Automotive Recycling — End-of-life car parts can support higher-value supply chains beyond scrap resale, expanding the role of recyclers in design-led circular manufacturing ecosystems.
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Metal Casting — Local foundries are becoming creative production partners for sustainable goods, with traditional casting methods supporting small-batch customization and distinctive surface finishes.